5 simple take-aways from 2017

2017 has been a rocky ride for most - last year's political earthquakes continue to dominate the daily news cycle, the world's disruptive tech brands lurched from one disaster to another and Airbnb provided a clear signpost that big global brands no longer feel comfortable shying away from polarising opinion. As the year draws to a close, we reflect on five talking points from 2017 with a simple lesson for marketers from each.

Take-away #1: We witnessed the advent of the cannabis age

While everyone is enamoured, mystified and focused on the rise of Bitcoin around the world, it seems like we may have overlooked a real seismic change about to happen in North America, up north in Canada.

In Summer 2018, Canada will legalize cannabis for recreational use nationwide, bringing about an important second end to ‘prohibition’ like what occurred in North America in the 1930’s.

Unlike the state-by-state and city-by-city approach in the US (since cannabis is still an illegal drug at the federal and national level), Canada is making a bold move to legalize it nationally and regulate the products, pricing and distribution through the government controlled Liquor Control Board Outlets.

25% of Canadian's are estimated to have used Cannabis in the past year and another 10% would give it a try if it was legalized. Based on those numbers, the market for cannabis in Canada is estimated at $6-10Bn. It’s not hard to imagine a day sometime soon when the majority of Canadians report using cannabis on a regular basis for either medical or recreational reasons.

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

Because when you consider all the potential usages and benefits of Cannabis – both as a medical remedy for a wide variety of ailments and as a recreational product – the number of established categories potentially affected by the legalisation of Cannabis is enormous.

Not just Tobacco and Alcohol, but consider all the pharmaceutical products being used to manage conditions like anxiety, sleep disorders, pain relief, ADHD, seizures, etc. – as well as all the products enjoyed for recreational and entertainment purposes at home and in social situations.

When you add it all up, the global opportunity for Cannabis is possibly in the $100’s of billions in value. Talk about a real growth opportunity.

Take-away #2: “Brand” is another word for “business insurance policy”

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO.

2017 has been a rough year for disruptive tech brands. The upheaval of social and political norms around the world, in conjunction with these brands’ self-acclaimed (if often quite fuzzy) role as pioneers of our collective future wellbeing has put them under the spotlight and found them wanting.

Social media platforms such as Facebook have been particularly hard hit – despite lengthy (TL:DR) manifestos outlining their ‘values’, and recent promises to do better at filtering suspect articles & memes in the future, Facebook stands accused of being a channel for election winning foreign and extremist propaganda.

Though the impact of this on their bottom line is debatable, is seems likely that their reputation - built at a significant cost – is permanently tarnished. The White House is just that much further away.

Where others have floundered, Tesla emerged from 2017 with their reputation largely intact. Allegations of sexist and racist internal culture, controversial steps to prevent employees from unionising and problems with the production of the “make or brake” Model 3, have all been largely dismissed.

But why hasn’t there been a #DeleteTesla movement? Perhaps because Tesla are always able to lead the conversation away from these unsavoury topics every time. There’s always a bigger story around Tesla, another world saving innovation, another mission to Mars.

Businesses of Tesla’s size are rarely perfect. For many tech companies, brand exists as a wrapper around a collection of product features. The problem is, without a strong brand and an underlying purpose, people have nothing to buy into. And no reason to stick with them when times are tough.

A strong brand is effectively your insurance policy – people are willing to forgive missteps if they know where you’re going and why. But if you don’t tell them, they’ll create their own (often negative) narrative to fill that void.

Lesson #3: It pays for brands to be dramatic

Tesla showroom in Gothenburg.

In the attention economy, a world of three screens and continuous partial attention, using drama well has become a key strategic discipline: an experiential moment that makes us engage, even if we’re not looking, and focus on a key attribute the brand wants us to notice about them.

Across the Atlantic the master of this is, of course, Elon Musk and Tesla – from live, on-stage comparisons of how fast it is to change a Tesla battery (versus refuelling an Audi at ‘the fastest filling station in LA’), to offering a ‘Ludicrous Mode’ on the Model S and a ‘Bioweapon Defence Mode’ on the Model X. Everything Tesla and Musk do has a splash of drama.

Do we, by contrast, have any idea of what’s interesting about the next generation of Mercedes or Jaguars? Do we hell. Do we care? No – we’re watching Tesla.

It pays to be dramatic, it seems. Strategically dramatic, of course.

Take-away #4: Action-orientated brands with a worldview went mainstream

Citizen brands, activist brands or progressive challengers, however they are labelled, these guys had a big year.

Across categories, incumbent brands are under threat from a wave of challengers driven-by a social purpose. Yet, because it's driven by progressive brands leading by example, through action, not slogans and advertisements, it's not a toppling of the establishment brands. It's a steady chipping away.

These challengers aren't necessarily shouting about how they are changing the world. They are just getting on and changing it. And whilst these actions and initiatives can individually seem small, the consequences for brands, people and the planet are huge.

Take-away #5: The future is what we decide to make, so stop worrying and make it happen

According to a poll carried out in July this year, 47% of young people in the UK said they were worried for the future. A third said they felt more anxious this year than at the same period in 2016. Whilst there's a number of factors contributing to young people feeling anxious, it's clear it's a rising trend.

Our minds often interpret the future as a linear 'path'; a sequence of events that happen and we have little choice but to accept it and respond. The truth is that people (although I'm not suggesting this is easy) make the future with big ideas and a collective will for change.

"Tomorrow is created from what we decide to do today" says author and futurist Richard Watson, "we should therefore spend less time worrying and more time discussing where it is we want to travel and how we get there."